i t o r i a ( JP a Another Housing Problem' 4 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Olalla That Olalla dam project is looking bet ter all the time. . . , . . ' The latest development is the Bureau ' of Land Management's decision to desig nate more than 1,000 acres it administers ; in the area for the reservoir site. This adds a bit of luster to an already bright picture for the eventual installation of a dam on Olalla Creek for irrigation ' and other purposes ..: . Certainly the BLM would have taken no such action without having a pretty fair idea that the dam was going to be de clared feasible. The long-overdue feasibility study is on the verge of being released, judging from a report given the Douglas County Water Resources Survey by John Mangan, area engineer for the U.S. Bureau of Reclama tion, which is in charge of the project. ' He told Water Resources Survey Engineer Ben Irving that the release of the report ; awaits only a few design changes in the dam itself. Based on the reconnaissance study which preceded the present , feasibility study and his talks with Mangan, Irving appears to have no doubts the project will be declared feasible (that is, that bene fits will outweigh costs). If it is, this will be the first major hurdle in a series of hurdles. The next . steps will be formation of a district in the area, with a board of directors through which the Bureau . of Reclamation can deal. Then comes the job of nailing down the landowners' desires for water. When the Bureau sees that people of the area want the water and .. that the project is feasible; it will cany the re quest to Congress.' Congress must then authorize construction and appropriate funds for the construction. THE LIGHTER SIDE: Many Bowl By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UP1) - Your chances of achieving everlasting fame by creating a new tossed salad are roughly comparable to your cnances ol winning the lr ish Sweepstakes, , These odds apply, of course, to proicssionai saiaa tosscrs. The odds are a little better If you are a norse. Scores of new salads are creat ed in this country every year, frequently by accident. But only rarely does one muster sufficient acclaim to warrant enahrinemcnt in a recipe book. - 1 Nevertheless, hope springs etcr. nal in the human' chef, and so the quest for aalad bowl immor tality continues hard apace. , Just this week I attended a dress rehearsal for a new tossed salad that will have its . world premier in Boston next month. Probate Case Delays Cited PORTLAND (UPI) - Chief Justice William M. McAllister of the Oregon Supreme Court com plained Thursday of what he called "shocking delay" in pro bate of estates in Oregon. McAllister spoko at the opening session of the 28th annual Oregon State Bar convention. Ho said reports by county clerks show that many cases of delay in probate cases are inexcusable. However, he added that iuduos are making an effort to eliminate the delays and urged attorneys to cooperaic. He said statistics show criminal cases generally are disposed of quickly and the median civil case in an Oregon court is not more tli an 12 months old. Two Oregon newspapermen re ceived Oregon State Bar press awards at a luncheon meeting. Robert W. Chandler, editor of tho Bend Bulletin was cited for the best editorial on legal matters in the past year. Chandler's editorial explained the death sentence given Jcannace June Freeman after a life sen tence had been handed out to Mrs. Gcrtrudo Jackson, mother of two children the woman had slain in Central Oregon. William Sanderson, a reporter for the Portland Oregonian, won the award for tho best news story, a series on the public defender system. Ui t. E. Mktn St. Publlihtd DiMy Eacept Sunday bv NEWS-REVIEW PUBLISHING CO. RoicMtrg, Oregon Ttltphont Entered ai second clats matter May 7. 1920, at the poll office at Rosrburp;, Or gon. under act of March t, 1173. J, V. Brenner Publisher The NewRevlew It a member et the United Prett International. NEA Service. Audit Bureau ol Circulation and the Oregon Newspaper publishers Association. National Adve'sing Representative Is Newspaper Advertising Service Co.. Rust Building. San Francisco. Calif. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier and Roseburg P. O. Boxes 1 month. $t.75) I months. StO.SOr 1 year. HI 00. By Melt In Oregon: 1 month, SUJj 3 months. S4.S0; 4 months, CT.OO 1 ear I (.00. Outside of Oregon: 1 month, Sl.;ii 3 months, SJ.2S; 4 months, 110.JO; 1 year $21.00.. Dam Possibilities Seek Salad immortality I decided to witness the event because it was the first time I had heard of a salad being tried out on the road before making its formal debut. This salad has Impressive cre dentials. It was created by the Waldorf system, which already has one nit salad to its credit. And it was named in honor of Mrs. Sean Lemass, wife of the prime minister of Ireland. The official presentation of "Salad Lemass" will take place at a luncheon in Boston Oct. 18 on the occasion of the prime min ister's visit to that city. William C. Waugh. chairman of the' luncheon committee, ar ranged for it to be given a trial run here with Thomas Kicrnan, the Irish ambassador, as the ranking taster. Kicrnan was asked if he would care for a dram or two of Irish spirits to pep up the taste buds before sampling the salad. I m a connoisseur of water." the ambassaor replied. The basic ingredients of "Sal ad Lemass" are multi-shades of greens, boots, cucumbers and chopped eggs. They are tossed with a mixture of French dress ing and cocktail sauce. i no Boston critics will, of course, arrive at their own judg ments, but I must say the re views at its out-of-town tryout were not entirely encouraging. 'It tastes bad and it looks' awful" was one apnraisal I heard. Its appearance possibly could bo improved by tossing in a few old sweepstakes tickets, but Mrs. Lemass, I fear, will never be come a Caesar, salad-wise. 3n 2) Ulid Gone V Taktn from the files of the New Review 40 year; AGO Sept. 21, 1M3 With their war paint smeared on in gobs and their head gear ad justed in regular Indian style, the "Umpquas" will hold their organ izational meeting tonight. The new civic club is making a grand and glorious start, and with Douglas County as its reservation, hopes to n ake this spot of Oregon known to ail me worm. 15 YEARS AGO Sept. 21, ins n increase 01 nearly zoo per cent in welfare expenditures in Oregon's 36 counties has occurred In the 10-ycar period from 1928 to idjs, the bureau of municipal re search of the University of Ore gon said today. 10 YEARS AGO S.pt. 21, 1953 Oregon farmers have been or dered to cut their 1954 wheat seed inns 28 per cent but they are not likely to take that much of a cut In their tall planting, according to Marion Thomas, extension ag ricultural economist at Oregon State College. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1963 Improve Estimates of cost of the dam stand at about $10 million. Part of the cost is re imbursable. That is, persons using water made available by the dam must contrib ute to the cost. This cost, of course, has not yet been determined. In addition, part of the cost will come from hydro electric receipts from other dams in the Northwest. It is expected that a considerable part of the cost will be non-reimbursable. This means contributing benefits to fish and wildlife, flood control, and recreation don't have to be paid back. It's still a long way from the start of construction, but the preparation work is well under way. A favorable feasibility study should be the key to starting the wheels moving a lot faster. Needless to say, the benefits to be reaped by the county will be manifold. The dam will contribute somewhat to flood control, will benefit fishlife, bring new lushness to as much as 13,000 acres southwest of Roseburg, furnish needed municipal and industrial water to Winston and Dillard. It may even help some in pollution abatement. And if all goes well, the Olalla Dam will be the first of a series of dams, fol lowing the pattern of efforts in Lane County. Lee McAllister, former Bureau of Reclamation engineer, insisted before his retirement that the first dam is the most difficult to establish. He visualized a series of key dams particularly on the South' Umpqua which could control the rampaging waters during the winter and raise strcamf lows in the summer. The results would be horizons of de velopment for the county seldom imagined. Day's News By Frank Jenkins In a radio and TV address in Washington the other evening, President Kennedy appealed to Congress and to the nation for an $11 billion tax cut. The theory of his proposal is that if our taxes are cut we will all go out and spend for THINGS WE WANT tho money we would other wise have had to spend for TAXES. This added spending, he argued, will CREATE PROSPERITY. The prosperity thus created, , he con tended, will provide tax income suf ficient to enable us to reduce and eventually PAY OFF our present debt. He added : "We are pledged to a course of true fiscal responsibility, leading to balanced budget in a balanced full employment economy. We are not talking politics. We are talking about more jobs and fewer recessions. We arc talking bout the future of our country. about its strength and growth and stability." Having thus outlined his theory, he then took a long step in the direction of appeasing the critics of his prooosal to pay off debt by cutting taxes. He promised that if the tax cut is enacted into law by the congress no wasteful, inefficient or UN NECESSARY government activity win be tolerated to supplement any economy-boosting tax reduction." He added: "We arc pledged to a course of true fiscal responsibility, leading to balanced budget in a balanced, full-employment economy. I favor tax reduction INSTEAD OF DEFICIT FEDERAL SPEND ING as a means of boosting our economy." Question: What does President Kennedy mean by UNNECESSARY govern ment activity? Let's do some supposing. Suppose that come next fall the situation might not look too favor able for the return of his admin istration to power. Suppose things weren t working out quite as planned. Suppose the poll-takers were reporting that the Republican candidate was showing a lot of strength and that some thing was needed to provide a little more PUSH FOR VOTES. Suppose that some BOONDOG GLING might be needed to im prove the situation. In that event, there would be a lot of pressure to RESUME the boondoggling procedures that have so often bem successful in the years of thepast. Does ho mean that in such an event his answer would be a flat NO? Does l.e mean that boondog gling is OUT for good and all and that never again will it be resorted to no matter what the political situation might be? Docs he mean that in the future, so far as ho is concerned, ECON OMY Is the watchword and let tho chips fall where they may? It will be interesting to watch. WINS POLL TWICE WATFORD. England (UPI) G Anderson won 20 pounds ($36) twice this week In the Watford football club's poll. The odds against this happening are 13.S million to 1. X .w - x1 vv Mil VJfv - Nk JfiPl 1 J:y "Jr. The sentencing of James M. Lan dis to 30 days in prison for fail ure to file an income tax return for five straight years is one of tiie most unusual pieces of juris prudence that ever happened to a dean of Harvard Law School particularly when you recall that this particular dean also succeed ed old Joe Kennedy as head of the Securities and Exchange Commis sion and later was chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board. Landis' defense claimed a five year lapse of memory due to pre occupation with public affairs. That is a large lapse of memory for a man who wrote considerable of the nation's laws, particularly during the Roosevelt years, and who was enjoying a thriving law practice when tho IRS boys asked him how come, no pay? The United States attorney, Robert Morgenthau, an nounced at the time of Landis' hearing, that while he paid up in full in 1961, "his filing did not meet the standard of voluntary dis closure," which I take to mean that some official came pointing a pa per at the dean. ear Miry DEAR ABDY: Recently you had a letter from HENRY THE DRUG GIST in your column. He complain ed that many customers asked him to fill half a proscription and he was always being asked ques tions that only doctors were quali fied to answer, such as what was wrong with them and what their prescriptions were for. Well, I wish you'd show me the doctor today who will take lime to answer his patients' questions. I've been going to doctors off and on for 35 years, and lately all I get is a silent ex amination, a fistful of prescriptions and the next thing I know, I am standing in the hall, facing a nurse with my wallet in my hand. Thank you. PAY NOW DIB LATER DEAR ABBY: This is for HEN RY THE DRUGGIST: My aged mother was given a prescription by her physician. I had it filled. There were 24 capsules for $19.00. My mother couldn't swallow even one capsule, so she told her doc tor and he promptly wroto out an other prescription for the same kind of medication only in liquid form. The liquid stuff cost $21. When 1 tried to return the cap sules to the drugstore I was told, We don't BUY pills we afc.LL them." DISGUSTED DEAR ABBY: If Henry wants to know why some customers ask for onlv half a nrcscrtntion. he s wel come to come to my house and look in my medicine cabinet. I have suffered with a skin problem for over 25 years, and only one who has had the experience knows Why Is it you con'f drive o new cor down the street without meet ing everybody you owe. fas-past. . ' . . Landis Sentencing Complete Travesty He could have drawn five years in jail, and a $50,000 fine. Instead of which he makes it with a rep rimand and a 30-day stint in the sneezer. It occurs to me that no end is served by this sort of business. Thirty days is what you get for loitering. It is not a sentence for one of America's mcst influential lawmakers, over the last SO years, who obviously was not logical in his failure to meet his tax liabil ity. People do not just "forget" tax es. A guy malting big money lures an accountant and a lawyer, even if he is a lawyer, to look after such minor details that the rest of us are taught to respect. Landis was making very big money one of nis aelcnse s explanations was that the value of some securities was hard to compute, which indi cates that some thought had been given to tho matter. Jim Landis was a hard-driving. hard-working, brilliant man. I have sat with him in a friend's house on occasion when he passed out in his chair from sheer combat fa- From The Patients' Pens! By ABIGAIL VANBUREN how frustrating it is to be "almost cured" about 100 times. I'll bet I have $1000 worth of ointments and pills all partially used. Either I start to use something and find I'm allergic to it, or I develop an immunity to it. My doctor is tops in his field and as soon as some new drug comes out on the mar ket, he is the first to try it. I don't like to tell a doctor what to do I but I wish mine would prescribe in smaller quantities until he knows how I will react to the medica tion. STILL ITCHING DEAR ABBY: Everybody knows that the price of drugs is way out of line. After paying $9.00 for six penicillin tablets, I wrote to Sen ator Kcfauver (God bless him) who investigated it. He wrote to thank me, and it's all being read into the Congressional record. All the druggists in the L. A. area are paid $7 per hour, $11 per hour on Sundays, and Slo per hour on holi days. If Henry would uke some of that loot, I'll get him a job. Or still better, I'll open a drugstore for him and we 11 go 50-50. HAROLD OF GARDENA DEAR ABBY: Henry, the Phar macist, was out of line complain ing because people came in asking him to fill only half a prescription. Two weeks ago I had a virus and a high temperature. Illy doctor pre scribed some pills and told me to take one every four hours un til my temperature went down to normal. And he emphatically told mo to discontinue the pills alter my temperature was normal. I had the prescription filled. It called for twelve pills which cost me $7.00. After I took three pills my temper ature went down to normal. That left me with nine pills. Half the prescription would have been plen ty. BURLINGAME For Abby's booklet, "How To llavt A Lovely Weddi $." send 50c to Abby, Box 3363. Beverly Hills, tylif- Everyoody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal r plv. write to Abby. Box 3363, Bev erly Hills. Cam. Enclose a stamp ed, self-addressed envelope. tigue. I know the feeling; it's hap pened to me after too many days of too much concentrated detail. But you can't be that tired for five years, it would seem to me, even if you have been recently engaged in writing an 86-page report crack ing down on Federal regulatory agencies, as a special assistant to President Kennedy. One does not "reform" or "pun ish" a man like Jim Landis by sending him to jail for 30 days, like some common disturber of the peace. If he is worthy of punish ment he should have been hit with the book. If the man was sick, over worked, overwrought, there should have been no jail sentence at all. I am glad I do not know the inside story on the Landis case, because I do not care to think of its implications. But I do say that the sentence imposed by Judge Sylvester Ryan was a complete travesty, either in one direction or the other. Landis worked under Roosevelt with Tommy Corcoran and Ben Co hen, among others, after being drafted from Harvard (he was a Felix Frankfurter protege there) to clean up the laws surrounding Wall Street operations. Joe Kenne dy had been put in charge of SEC, largely because he knew what to look for in keeping the boys hon est, and when old Joe stepped down Landis stepped in. After SEC Landis went back to Harvard, and became dean. Then he returned to Washington to ride herd on the CAB, but incurred some Harry Truman wrath and got slung out of office. It was then that Joe Kennedy offered him a job as "vice president in charge of the Joseph P. Kennedy enter prises or any other title you want." He had also been a cam Daien advisor to President Kennedy in 1960 on the subject of reg ulatory agencies again. I say you do not put a man like this in iail for 30 days for a gross flouting of the nation's laws. The stigma is bound to suck, ine ais grace adheres. And the cure is cer tainly not in the punitive wrist slap. You might as well administer an aspirin for a case of cancer. Whatever the story, I'm glad I; don't know it. I just wish it hadn't happened. j (Copyright, 1963 by United Feature Synd. Inc.) j The Almanac By United Press International Today is Saturday, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 1963 with 101 to fol-i low. The moon is approaching first quarter. The morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Jupiter j and Saturn. : Those born today include Eng- j lish novelist and Sociologist II. G. Wells, in 1866. On this day in history: In 1792. France was proclaimed a Republic and the royal family was deposed. In 1893, the first successful gasoline - operated, motor car made in America designed and built by Charles and Frank Dur yea appeared on the streets of Springfield, Mass. In 1938,. at least 450 persons were killed in a hurricane that battered the coasts of New Eng land and New York. In 1953. Rocky M a r c i a n o knocked out Archie Moore in the ninth round at Yankee Stadium, successfully defending his heavy weight title for the sixth time. A thought for the day H. G. Wells said: Human History be comes more and more a race be tween education and catastrophe." Use Of Indian Name Sought For Park In Cold Hill Area A very charming state park on the Rogue River, between the towns of Rogue River and Gold Hill has the quite prosaic, though descriptive, title "Valley of the Rogue State Park." - Eric Allen, the aggressive managing editor of the Med ford Mail Tribune, is urging a more appropriate name for the park. "Valley of the Rogue," says Allen, "is, in our view, uninspired, confusingly descriptive (what with all the other Rogue this-and-that's around) , vapid and lacking in character." - He proposes the name "Takelma State Park." "Takelma, Allen says, is an In dian wprd meaning, "Those who live along the river." Also, he says, it is the name of the Indian tribe which once lived along the Rogue between Illinois River and Table Rock. The word "Takilma" presently has considerable usage in the area and is the name of a post ofice in Josephine County. It, says Al len, is a "latter-day adoption of Takelma." The late Lewis A. McArthur in his book Oregon Geographic names says of the word "Takilma" that, in addition to being the name of an Indian tribe, it reportedly was the name of an Indian chief. Earlier it had been spelled "Tak lamah" but was changed because of conflict with a place of the same name in Oklahoma. Judging from all this discussion of the word and its many uses, it would seem that "Takelma" is in the same class with the word "Umpqua" which we see about us on every hand. The word "Umpqua" seems to have been used by the Indians for many purposes. It was the name of the tribe, it was the designation of the area, it was used as a hail ing sign as we today say "Hi," or "Hillo." It seems to me that our early settlers in Oregon missed the boat in their failure to apply Indian names to communities, scenic spots and areas. The state of Washington did little better. Washington uses many more titles drawn from the Indian language. But Washington came along later than did Oregon, being carved out of the Oregon Terri tory. Our early, day Oregon settlers brought along the names of the places they left, or utilized the names of prominent citizens. It was through this latter practice that the uninspired name of the town "Deer (.reek" was changed to "Roseburg in honor of the town's founder, Aaron Hose. : But the early settlers also used locally descriptive names. Thus Oregon has a confusing number of Deer Creeks, Wolf Creeks, Boulder Creeks, Big Creeks, Rock Creeks, Elk Creeks, and others. But there's also such names as "Starveout" and "Hogem," based upon experience. It seems, according to the tale, that, when gold mining was at its height in Southern Oregon, a well financed and outfitted party of Englishmen made a winter camp in the mountains. Over the ridge there were several prospectors working a small watershed. In bad weather they exhausted their food and were facing starvation. One of the party crawled to the English camp and sought aid. He was turned away without help and the desperate prospectors . were left to starve. So, that's how tho names of the areas came about, accord ing to the old story. , Then we find Grave Creek, Sui cide Creek, Hangman's Creek, Stagecoach Pass, and many other local names based on experience. But our list of Indian names is altogether too small. More recently we have begun to apply the orig inal names to some areas, or use the names of Indians friendly to i . - . . : b JLP r1 WE CAN HELP YOU BUY THE CAR YOU WANT, ON TERMS YOU CAN AFFORD Sure, the new cors are beautiful. And you may know just the one you want. Let us help you get it with a financing plan designed to suit your income and your budget. Our terms are easy! Douglas Roseburg ' ' The' , Editor's Corner By Charles V. Stanton the white man, such as the new national forest "Winema" in Klam ath County, named for an Indian woman anxious to preserve peace. We need more names like "Yon-calla,"- the "Home of the Eagle," in the Indian language. We sincerely hope Eric is suc cessful in his campaign to get In dian names applied to some of our state parks. 1 , But I'll most vigorously object to any change in the name of that Douglas County state park at Can yonville, the Charles V. Stanton park! : t t : Herbert Lumber Co. Mill Now At Riddle There's nothing quieter than the place where a sawmill used to be. Ask Mrs. Milton Herbert or Mrs. Richard Petterson. neighbors of the Herbert Lumber Co. mill east of Canyonville which buzzed busily for 15 years before it was moved to Riddle last week. A column of black smoke wrote finish Friday afternoon to the mov ing project, when remaining scrap md buildings were burned. ' A new, more modern and ef ficient sawmill was built this sum mer adjacent to the Herbert Lum ber Co. planer mill at Riddle. All 15 men employed in Canyonville hi.ve been moved to the new mill, too. The pond at the pew site cov ers as much acreage as ' the old one east of Canyonville did, ac enrdine to Milton Herbert, owner. The Herberts brought their port able maill from Springfield the summer of 1948 and for, almost three years of the 15 they were lo cated there, ran two shifts daily with about 15 men bh a shift. Ac cording to Herbert, they plan to drain the pond this winter and convert the former mill site to horse pasture. . - ;: ,. '.?' C. Hess Appointed To Loan Committee Clifford Hess of Roseburg has been appointed as a member of the throe-man- Douglas. County Farmers Home Administration Committee.- Lcland K. Haldorson, the agency's county supervisor, an nounced the appointment which is for three years. Hess succeeds Curtis ' Barker of Roseburg, whoso three :year term expired this year. The two other members of the committee are Harold L. Crouch, Oakland, and Peter J. Pon, Roseburg. The local Farmers Home Admin istration County Committee re views applications by farmers and other rural families for six differ ent types of agricultural, housing and water loans made in Douglas County. During the fiscal year ending June 30, a total of $1,001,670 in Farmers Home Administration loans were made through the agen cy's local county office in Eugene to Douglas, Coos. Curry and Lane County farmers. SEE US FOR THE BEST Aoro FlNAMIW County STATE BANK Oakland Sutherlin TV ss